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Strategic Public Infrastructure for Rail and Integrated Transport (SPIRIT) Act

The SPIRIT Act is an independent public policy proposal and community discussion initiative. This website is not affiliated with the United States Government or any federal agency.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • The SPIRIT Act is a living draft legislative framework exploring a federally integrated high-speed rail and airline system. It is designed as a policy model to support public discussion and inform potential future transportation legislation.

  • The SPIRIT Act is primarily a policy proposal in structure that also functions as a thought experiment. It is intended to explore and clarify how a federally integrated rail and aviation system could be designed, while also informing real-world public policy discussion.

  • The SPIRIT Act is focused on infrastructure reform as its primary goal, with the aim of improving connectivity, efficiency, and accessibility in U.S. transportation systems through the development of a public transportation option that can operate alongside and in competition with private sector services.

    It does not prescribe a single ownership model; instead, it explores how different governance and operational structures—public, private, or hybrid—might function within a federally integrated rail and aviation system.

  • The SPIRIT Act does not require nationalization of existing infrastructure. It is structured to accommodate a range of governance models, including continued private ownership, public acquisition in specific corridors, or hybrid operational structures.

  • The SPIRIT Act does not assume corruption or mismanagement can be fully eliminated, but it is designed to reduce risk through structural safeguards. These include transparent procurement and budgeting processes, multi-level oversight between federal and operational agencies, clear performance benchmarks, public reporting requirements, and mechanisms for independent audit and review.

    The framework emphasizes accountability through institutional design rather than relying on any single governing body or operator to self-regulate.

  • The SPIRIT Act is not a costed implementation plan at this stage, but it is grounded in real-world infrastructure models such as publicly funded rail systems, aviation regulation frameworks, and public–private infrastructure partnerships.

    In general, large-scale transportation systems of this type are economically feasible when implemented incrementally and supported by long-term public investment strategies.

  • Elements of the SPIRIT Act have precedents in existing systems, but not in a fully integrated form. High-speed rail networks in countries such as France, Japan, and Spain demonstrate large-scale public rail infrastructure, while commercial aviation remains largely privately operated under public regulatory frameworks.

    The SPIRIT Act explores a more integrated model that combines these domains more explicitly within a single national framework.

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About & Legal Notice:

The SPIRIT Act remains an evolving public proposal open to revision and amendment. Feedback, criticism, policy suggestions, and proposed edits may be submitted via the provided form:

Community submissions and feedback may be reviewed and incorporated into future revisions of the draft proposal, submission of feedback does not establish partnership, representation, authorship rights, or compensation.

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SPIRIT Act is an independent public policy initiative and is not affiliated with the United States Government.